GOVERNOR
EXECUTIVE ORDER NUMBER SIXTY-SEVEN
(2020) AND ORDER OF PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY SEVEN
Phase Three Easing of Certain
Temporary Restrictions Due to Novel Coronavirus
(COVID-19)
Importance of the Issue
On June 2, 2020, Executive Order 65 and Order of Public Health
Emergency Six implemented Phase Two, continuing to ease business, gathering,
and traveling restrictions originally imposed by Executive Order 53 and
Executive Order 55 issued in March of 2020. During the weeks following, the
public health metrics have continued to show positive trends. Our testing is
increasing, our supply of personal protective equipment is steady, our hospital
bed capacity remains steady, our hospitalizations statewide have a downward
trend, and the percentage of positive tests continue to trend downward. Virginia
continues to make significant progress.
As outlined below, we will move forward into Phase Three. In
doing so, we must remember that the virus is still in our communities. We must
remain cautious—continue teleworking whenever possible, wash our hands frequently,
do not touch our faces, and wear face coverings. Through these efforts, we will
continue to protect ourselves, our families, and our fellow Virginians as we
respond to this emergency.
Directive
Therefore, by virtue of the authority vested in me by Article V
of the Constitution of Virginia, by § 44-146.17 of the Code of Virginia,
by any other applicable law, and in furtherance of Amended Executive Order 51
(2020), and by virtue of the authority vested in the State Health Commissioner
pursuant to §§ 32.1-13, 32.1-20, and 35.1-10 of the Code of Virginia, the
following is ordered:
A. EASING OF BUSINESS RESTRICTIONS
1. All Businesses
Any businesses, not listed in this section, should adhere to
the Guidelines for All Business Sectors expressly incorporated by reference
herein as best practices. This guidance is located here.
2. Restaurants, Dining Establishments, Food Courts, Breweries,
Microbreweries, Distilleries, Wineries, and Tasting Rooms
Restaurants, dining establishments, food courts, breweries,
microbreweries, distilleries, wineries, and tasting rooms may continue to
operate delivery, take-out, and indoor and outdoor service, provided such
businesses comply with the Guidelines for All Business Sectors, and
sector-specific guidance for restaurant and beverage services incorporated by
reference herein. Such guidance includes, but is not limited to, the following
requirements:
a. All parties must be separated by at least six feet,
including in the bar area. Tables at which dining parties are seated must be
positioned six feet apart from other tables. If tables are not movable, parties
must be seated at least six feet apart, including in the bar area.
b. Customers may be provided with self-service options.
Facilities must provide hand sanitizer at food lines and require the use of
barriers (e.g., gloves or deli paper) when employees or patrons touch common
utensils. Food lines must be monitored by trained staff at all times of
operation, and serving utensils must be changed hourly.
c. Employees working in customer-facing areas must wear face
coverings over their nose and mouth at all times.
d. A thorough cleaning and disinfection of frequently-contacted
surfaces must be conducted every 60 minutes during operation. Tabletops,
chairs, and credit card/bill folders must be cleaned in between patrons.
e. Bar seats and congregating areas of restaurants must be closed
to patrons except for through-traffic. Non-bar seating in the bar area (i.e.,
tables or counter seats that do not line up to a bar or food service area) may
be used for customer seating as long as a minimum of six feet is provided
between parties at tables.
f. If any such business cannot adhere to these requirements, it
must close.
3. Farmers Markets
Farmers markets may continue to operate, provided such
businesses comply with the Guidelines for All Business Sectors and the
sector-specific guidelines for farmers markets incorporated by reference
herein. Such guidance includes, but is not limited to, the following
requirements:
a. Employees and patrons must maintain at least six feet of
physical distancing between individuals who are not Family members, as defined
below, at all times. Configure operations to avoid congestion or congregation
points.
b. Employees and vendors in customer-facing areas must wear
face coverings over their nose and mouth at all times.
c. Vendors must supply hand sanitizer stations or hand washing
stations for patrons and employees.
d. A thorough cleaning and disinfection of frequently-contacted
surfaces must be conducted.
e. If any such business cannot adhere to these requirements, it
must close.
4. Brick and Mortar Retail Businesses Not Listed in Section C,
Paragraph 1 (Non-Essential Retail)
Any brick and mortar retail business not listed in section C,
paragraph 1 below may continue to operate, provided such business complies with
the Guidelines for All Business Sectors and the sector-specific guidance for
brick and mortar retail expressly incorporated by reference herein. Such
guidance includes, but is not limited to, the following requirements:
a. Employees and patrons must maintain at least six feet of
physical distancing between individuals who are not Family members at all
times.
b. Employees working in customer-facing areas must wear face
coverings over their nose and mouth at all times.
c. If any such business cannot adhere to these requirements, it
must close.
5. Fitness and Exercise Facilities
Fitness centers, gymnasiums, recreation centers, sports
facilities, and exercise facilities may continue to operate indoor and outdoor
activities, provided such businesses comply with the Guidelines for All
Business Sectors and the sector-specific guidelines for fitness and exercise
facilities expressly incorporated by reference herein. Such guidance includes,
but is not limited to, the following requirements:
a. Patrons, members, and guests who are not Family members must
remain at least ten feet apart during all activities except where necessary for
the physical safety of an individual.
b. Instructors and all participants of group exercise and
fitness classes who are not Family members must maintain at least ten feet of
physical distancing between each other at all times, with the exception of
swimming lessons, where parents or guardians may support a participant during
class, and instructors may have contact with swimmers when necessary.
c. Occupancy must be limited to no more than 75% of the lowest
occupancy load on the certificate of occupancy.
d. Hot tubs, spas, splash pads, spray pools, and interactive
play features must be closed.
e. Outdoor and indoor swimming pools may be open, provided
occupancy is limited to no more than 75% of the lowest occupancy load on the
certificate of occupancy and all swimmers maintain at least ten feet of
physical distance from others who are not Family members.
f. Employees working in customer-facing areas must wear face
coverings over their nose and mouth at all times. Lifeguards responding to
distressed swimmers are exempt from this requirement.
g. Employers must ensure cleaning and disinfection of shared
equipment after each use.
h. Facilities must prohibit the use of any equipment that
cannot be thoroughly disinfected between uses (e.g., climbing rope, exercise
bands, etc.).
i. Businesses must supply hand sanitizer stations or hand
washing stations for patrons, members, and guests.
j. If any such business cannot adhere to these requirements, it
must close.
6. Personal Care and Personal Grooming Services
Beauty salons, barbershops, spas, massage centers, tanning
salons, tattoo shops, and any other location where personal care or personal
grooming services are performed may continue to operate, provided such
businesses comply with the Guidelines for All Business Sectors and the
sector-specific guidelines for personal care and personal grooming services
expressly incorporated by reference herein. Such guidance includes, but is not
limited to, the following requirements:
a. Service providers must maintain at least six feet of
physical distancing between work stations.
b. Service providers and employees working in customer-facing
areas must wear face coverings over their nose and mouth at all times.
c. Provide face coverings for clients or ask that clients bring
a face covering with them, which they must wear during the service. Limit
services to only those that can be completed without clients removing their
face covering.
d. A thorough cleaning and disinfection of frequently-contacted
surfaces must be conducted every 60 minutes of operation, while cleaning and
disinfecting all personal care and personal grooming tools after each use. If
that is not possible, such items must be discarded.
e. If any such business cannot adhere to these requirements, it
must close.
7. Campgrounds
Privately-owned campgrounds as defined in § 35.1-1 of the
Code of Virginia may continue to operate, provided they comply with the
Guidelines for All Business Sectors and the sector-specific guidelines for
campgrounds, which are expressly incorporated by reference herein. Such
guidance includes, but is not limited to, the following requirements:
a. Employees working in public-facing areas must wear face
coverings over their nose and mouth at all times.
b. Businesses must supply hand sanitizer stations or hand
washing stations for patrons, members, and guests.
c. If any such business cannot adhere to these requirements, it
must close.
8. Indoor Shooting Ranges
Indoor shooting ranges may continue to operate, provided they
comply with the following requirements:
a. Employees and patrons must maintain at least six feet of
physical distancing between individuals who are not Family members at all
times.
b. Employees working in customer-facing areas are required to
wear face coverings over their nose and mouth at all times.
c. Perform thorough cleaning and disinfection of
frequently-contacted surfaces every 60 minutes of operation, while disinfecting
all equipment between each customer use and prohibiting the use of equipment
that cannot be thoroughly disinfected.
d. Either thoroughly clean shared or borrowed equipment in
between uses, or only allow the use of personal equipment at the range.
e. If any such indoor shooting range cannot adhere to these
requirements, it must close.
9. Public Beaches
All public beaches as defined in § 10.1-705 of the Code of
Virginia may remain open to individual and family recreational activity. All
such public beaches, must comply with the requirements below.
a. Require beachgoers to practice physical distancing of at
least six feet between each person unless they are with Family members.
b. Prohibit gatherings of more than 250 people.
c. Implement and adhere to a cleaning schedule for all
high-touch surfaces made of plastic or metal such as benches and railings that
includes cleaning at least every two hours between the hours of 9 a.m. and 6
p.m.
d. Establish, train, and deploy a team to educate and promote
compliance with beach rules and refer cases of noncompliance to public safety
personnel, if appropriate.
e. Establish procedures for temporary beach closure or access
limitations in the event of overcrowding.
f. Ensure adequate personal protective equipment for all
lifeguards.
g. Perform a disinfectant-level cleaning of all public
restrooms every two hours with an EPA-approved disinfectant by staff or
volunteers trained to follow Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
guidance on cleaning and disinfecting.
h. For chair and umbrella rental companies, require vendors to
set up chairs and umbrellas for customers, maintaining at least six feet of
distance between groups, and to clean equipment between rentals following
Environmental Protection Agency and CDC guidelines on cleaning and
disinfecting.
i. Post signage at all public access points to the beaches and
other "cluster prone" areas providing health reminders regarding
physical distancing, gathering prohibitions, options for high risk individuals,
and staying home if sick. Messaging must be specific to location.
j. Locality shall provide daily metrics to its local health
department to include beach closures, complaint incidents, police reports of
violence related to enforcement, and number of reports of noncompliance to be
submitted each Monday.
k. All employees and contract workers must wear a cloth face
covering when not able to practice physical distancing following CDC Use of
Face Cloth Coverings guidance.
l. Employees and contract workers must have access to soap and
water or hand sanitizer containing at least 60% alcohol, and locality should
provide best hygiene practices to employees on a regular basis, including
washing hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds and practicing
respiratory etiquette protocols.
m. Locality shall require all employees and contract workers to
take their temperature before reporting to work and direct such employees not
to report to work if they have a fever of over 100.4 degrees, have experienced
chills, or have been feverish in the last 72 hours.
n. Follow enhanced workplace safety best practices outlined in
the Guidelines for All Business Sectors.
10. Racetracks and Speedways
Outdoor racetracks may remain open for racing events, provided
such businesses comply with the Guidelines for All Business Sectors and the
sector-specific guidelines for racetracks expressly incorporated by reference
herein. Such guidance includes, but is not limited to, the following
requirements:
a. The event must be held at locations with the ability to
restrict access (i.e. barriers and gating).
b. All individuals must maintain at least six feet of physical
distancing between themselves and other participants who are not Family
members.
c. Food services must adhere to the sector-specific guidance
for restaurant and beverage services and camping areas must adhere to the
sector-specific guidance for campgrounds.
d. The total number of attendees (including both participants
and spectators) cannot exceed the lesser of 50% of the lowest occupancy load on
the certificate of occupancy, if applicable, or 1000 persons.
11. Entertainment and Amusement Businesses
Performing arts venues, concert venues, sports venues, movie
theaters, museums, aquariums, zoos, fairs, carnivals, amusement parks, public
and private social clubs, botanical gardens, entertainment centers, historic
horse racing facilities, bowling alleys, skating rinks, arcades, trampoline
parks, arts and craft facilities, escape rooms, and other places of indoor
public amusement may open provided such businesses comply with the Guidelines
for All Business Sectors and the sector-specific guidelines, which are
expressly incorporated by reference herein. Such guidance includes, but is not
limited to, the following requirements:
a. The total number of attendees (including both participants
and spectators) cannot exceed the lesser of 50% of the lowest occupancy load on
the certificate of occupancy, if applicable, or 1,000 persons.
b. All private bookings must comply with section B, paragraph
1.
c. Install visible markers for queue lines that separate people
by six feet of physical distance.
d. Create a guest flow plan of modified queue lines into and
within the facility. Determine areas likely to become bottlenecks or pinch
points and adjust guest flow accordingly.
e. Ten feet of physical distancing is required between parties
at all establishments with physical activity, singing, or cheering; six feet of
physical distancing is required in other venues.
f. Perform thorough cleaning and disinfection of
frequently-contacted surfaces including digital ordering devices, check
presenters, self-service areas, tabletops, bathroom surfaces, games, shared
equipment, and other common touch areas every 60 minutes during operation.
g. Where possible, install plexiglass barriers in front of
commonly used point-of-sale or guest service stations.
h. Employees working in customer-facing areas are required to
wear face coverings over their nose and mouth at all times.
i. Provide hand washing or sanitizing stations for attendees
and employees.
j. If any such business cannot adhere to these requirements, it
must close.
12. Recreational Sports
Indoor and outdoor recreational sports activities are
permitted, provided participants and organizers of recreational sports
activities comply with the Guidelines for All Business Sectors and the
sector-specific guidelines for recreational sports expressly incorporated by
reference herein. Such guidance includes, but is not limited to, the following
requirements:
a. Ten feet of physical distance should be maintained by all
instructors, participants, and spectators, where practicable.
b. The total number of attendees (including both participants
and spectators) of recreational sports cannot exceed the lesser of 50% of the
occupancy load of the certificate of occupancy for the venue, if applicable, or
250 persons. For sports played on a field, attendees are limited to 250 persons
per field.
13. Enforcement
Guidelines for All Business Sectors and the sector-specific
guidelines appear here. The Virginia Department of Health
shall have authority to enforce section A of this Order. Any willful violation
or refusal, failure, or neglect to comply with this Order, issued pursuant to
§ 32.1-13 of the Code of Virginia, is punishable as a Class 1 misdemeanor
pursuant to § 32.1-27 of the Code of Virginia. The State Health
Commissioner may also seek injunctive relief in circuit court for violation of
this Order, pursuant to § 32.1-27 of the Code of Virginia. In addition,
any agency with regulatory authority over a business listed in section A may
enforce this Order as to that business to the extent permitted by law.
B. CONTINUED RESTRICTIONS
1. All Public and Private In-Person Gatherings
All public and private in-person gatherings of more than 250
individuals are prohibited. The presence of more than 250 individuals
performing functions of their employment is not a "gathering." A
"gathering" includes, but is not limited to, parties, celebrations,
or other social events, whether they occur indoors or outdoors.
Individuals may attend religious services subject to the
following requirements:
a. Individuals attending religious services must be at least six
feet apart when seated and must practice proper physical distancing at all
times. Family members, as defined below, may be seated together.
b. Mark seating and common areas where attendees may congregate
in six-foot increments to maintain physical distancing between persons who are
not Family members.
c. Any items used to distribute food or beverages must be
disposable, used only once and discarded.
d. A thorough cleaning and disinfection of frequently-contacted
surfaces must be conducted prior to and following any religious service.
e. Post signage at the entrance that states that no one with a
fever or symptoms of COVID-19 is permitted to participate in the religious
service.
f. Post signage to provide public health reminders regarding
physical distancing, gatherings, options for high risk individuals, and staying
home if sick.
g. If religious services cannot be conducted in compliance with
the above requirements, they must not be held in-person.
Further, any social gathering held in connection with a religious
service is subject to the public and private in-person gatherings restriction
in section B, paragraph 1. Additional suggested guidance can be found here.
2. Institutions of Higher Education
Institutions of higher education shall comply with all
applicable requirements under the Phased Guidance of Virginia Forward and the
"Guidelines for All Business Sectors." Any postsecondary provider
offering vocational training in a profession regulated by a Virginia state
agency/board must also comply with any sector-specific guidelines relevant to
that profession to the extent possible under the regulatory training requirements.
Such professions may include, but are not necessarily limited to: aesthetician,
barber, cosmetologist, massage therapist, nail technician, and practical nurse.
3. Overnight Summer Camps
Overnight services of summer camps, as defined in § 35.1-1
of the Code of Virginia, must remain closed.
4. Enforcement
Violations of section B paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 of this Order
shall be a Class 1 misdemeanor pursuant to § 44-146.17 of the Code of
Virginia.
C. CONTINUED GUIDANCE AND DIRECTION
1. Essential Retail Businesses
Essential retail businesses as set out below may continue to
remain open during their normal business hours. They should comply with the
Guidelines for All Business Sectors expressly incorporated by reference and
linked here, as best practices. Employers are
required to provide face coverings to employees.
a. Grocery stores, pharmacies, and other retailers that sell
food and beverage products or pharmacy products, including dollar stores, and
department stores with grocery or pharmacy operations;
b. Medical, laboratory, and vision supply retailers;
c. Electronic retailers that sell or service cell phones, computers,
tablets, and other communications technology;
d. Automotive parts, accessories, and tire retailers as well as
automotive repair facilities;
e. Home improvement, hardware, building material, and building
supply retailers;
f. Lawn and garden equipment retailers;
g. Beer, wine, and liquor stores;
h. Retail functions of gas stations and convenience stores;
i. Retail located within healthcare facilities;
j. Banks and other financial institutions with retail
functions;
k. Pet and feed stores;
l. Printing and office supply stores; and
m. Laundromats and dry cleaners.
2. State Agencies
All relevant state agencies shall continue to work with all
housing partners to execute strategies to protect the health, safety, and
well-being of Virginians experiencing homelessness during this pandemic and to
assist Virginians in avoiding evictions or foreclosures.
3. Face Coverings
The waiver of § 18.2-422 of the Code of Virginia is
continued, so as to allow the wearing of a medical mask, respirator, or any
other protective face covering for the purpose of facilitating the protection
of one’s personal health in response to the COVID-19 public health emergency
declared by the State Health Commissioner on February 7, 2020, and reflected in
Amended Executive Order 51 (2020) declaring a state of emergency in the
Commonwealth. Amended Executive Order 51 (2020) remains so amended. This waiver
is effective as of March 12, 2020 and will remain in effect until
11:59 p.m. on September 8, 2020 unless amended or rescinded by further
executive order.
Further, where a mandatory business sector requirement in this
Order conflicts with a requirement to wear a face covering in Executive Order
63 and Order of Public Health Emergency Five (2020), the business
sector-specific requirement governs.
4. Family Members
"Family members" means blood relations, adopted,
step, and foster relations, as well as all individuals residing in the same
household. Family members are not required to maintain physical distancing
while in their homes.
5. Exceptions
Nothing in the Order shall limit: (a) the provision of health
care or medical services; (b) access to essential services for low-income
residents, such as food banks; (c) the operations of the media; (d) law
enforcement agencies; or (e) the operation of government.
6. Expiration of Order
Amended Executive Order 65 and Amended Order of Public Health
Emergency Six shall expire on Tuesday, June 30, 2020, at 11:59 p.m..
Effective Date of the Executive Order
This Order shall be effective 12:00 a.m., Wednesday, July
1, 2020. This Executive Order shall remain in full force and effect until
amended or rescinded by further executive order.
Given under my hand and under the Seal of the Commonwealth of
Virginia and the Seal of the Office of the State Health Commissioner of the
Commonwealth of Virginia, this 30th day of June, 2020.
/s/ Ralph S. Northam
Governor